Hidcote Bartrim

Leonard’s Gazetteer of England and Wales 1850

The Parliamentary Gazetteer of England and Wales 1851

Hidcoat-Batrim, a hamlet in Mickleton parish, county of Gloucester; 2 miles north of Campden-Chipping. Acreage and houses with the parish. A. P. £841. Pop., in 1801, 59; in 1811, 90. Poor rates, in 1838, £46 1s.

Poll Books

Directories

Mickleton Kellys Gloucestershire Directory 1856

Mickleton Kellys Gloucestershire Directory 1856

Mickleton is or township, village and parish, 3 miles from Campden station on the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton line of railway, 32 miles from Gloucester, 8 from Evesham, and 90 north-west from London, in the upper division of the Hundred of Kiftsgate, and bishopric of Gloucester and Bristol, and Shipston-on-Stour Union. The church is a stone building, having a spire, 6 bells, chimes, centre and side aisles, and chancel; it is dedicated to St. Lawrence. The living is a vicarage, united with Ebrington; the Rev. Wm. Thomas Haddow is the incumbent, and the Rev. Richard Gascoyne is curate. The population, in 1851, was 762; the acreage contained in the parish is 2,529 acres, and the rateable value £4,600. Lady Steele is lady of the manor.

George Jarratt, to Stratford-on-Avon , Tuesday; to Evesham, on Monday.

Source: Post Office Directory of Gloucestershire with Bath and Bristol. Printed and Published by Kelly and Co., 19, 20 & 21, Old Boswell Court, St. Clement’s, Strand, London. 1856.

Marriages

Marriages at Mickleton 1594 to 1812

Note. – The Mickleton marriages 1594-1812 are in five volumes of the parish register. The first of these is numbered 3, No. 1 being the earliest register of Aston Subedge, which is still at Mickleton, and No. 2 being the first register of Ebrington, which has been restored to its proper place. Down to 1754 the marriages are in the same books with the baptisms and burials. After Lord Hardwicke’s Act in that year they are in separate volumes, IV (6) and V (8). This transcript has been prepared by Mr. S. G. Hamilton, of Hertford College, Oxford, and is now printed under his supervision by the permission of the Revs. W. V. B. Perry and A. M. Coxwell-Rogers, successively Vicars of Mickleton.

William Smith & Mary Smith, “both of Stoke, in Gloc’shire, being extra-parochial place, were married at Mickleton, the next parish church”, 16 Feb. 1781 [Original footnote: Stoke=Lark Stoke, which I believe to have been then, as it is now, in the parish of Ilmington; but that place being in Warwickshire, Stoke was supposed, or pretended to be extra-parochial.]